Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Animal models for chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
- Journal:
- Journal of cellular biochemistry
- Year:
- 2007
- Authors:
- Pekarsky, Yuri et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Molecular Virology · United States
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL), the most common leukemia in the Western world, results from an expansion of a rare population of CD5+ mature B-lymphocytes. Although clinical features and genomic abnormalities in B-CLL have been studied in considerable detail, the molecular mechanisms underlying disease development has remained unclear until recently. In the last 4 years, several transgenic mouse models for B-CLL were generated. Investigations of these mouse models revealed that deregulation of three pathways, Tcl1-Akt pathway, TNF-NF-kB pathway, and Bcl2-mediated anti-apoptotic pathway, result in the development of B-CLL. While deregulation of TCL1 alone caused a B-CLL phenotype in mice, overexpression of Bcl2 required aberrantly activated TNF-NF-kB pathway signaling to yield the disease phenotype. In this article, we present what has been learned from mice with B-CLL phenotype and how these mouse models of B-CLL were used to test therapeutic treatments for this common leukemia.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17131382/